Industry News

Threat
Stack, the leader in cloud infrastructure security, today announced
the next stage of its multi-cloud support which extends security
observability to containers. Leveraging full workload observability of
all major public cloud platforms including Amazon Web Services (AWS),
Microsoft Azure, and Google (News - Alert) Cloud Platform (GCP) gives Threat Stack
customers the flexibility to scale and grow their business using the
cloud platform of their choosing without sacrificing security.

According to Gartner's (News - Alert) October 2018 report "Market
Insight: Multicloud Becomes Essential for Cloud IaaS Offerings," 49
percent of organizations were approaching their cloud computing IaaS
strategy through multi-cloud adoption in 2017, but that is expected to
increase to 75 percent by 2022. Organizations are seeing multiple
benefits of multi-cloud environments including access to best of breed
capabilities offered by the various cloud service providers, cost
savings, reduced risk of vendor lock-in, and data portability.

Thrat Stack helps its customers achieve full-stack cloud security
observability across their entire infrastructure regardless of the cloud
provider. With visibility into every workload Threat Stack customers can
quickly identify and mitigate risks without sacrificing the availability
of critical services and customer-facing applications.

"Multi-cloud is quickly becoming the standard cloud model across the
industry and Threat Stack has been helping secure multi-cloud
environments for over three years," said Aditya Joshi, Executive Vice
President, Product and Technology, Threat Stack. "Providing workload
observability into your cloud infrastructure, regardless of deployment
model is a critical aspect of true full-stack cloud security
observability."

Web-scale Networking

The idea of Web-scale IT is more than just another 'hot' buzzword or problematic disruption. What started with data center operators has become mainstream thinking in large enterprises, and it's now driving changes in service provider operations, as well. Web-scale tools that allow application development to move quickly have also created some challenges for service provider networks.